PROFILE: Fire burns low for aging Philippine rebel leader

AFP, MANILA

Moro National Liberation Front leader Nur Misuari, center, addresses his armed followers on Aug. 12 in one of their camps in Indanan, Sulu, in the southern Philippines, following his declaration that he was breaking away from the government because he believed they were sidelining his group.

Photo: AFP

Nur Misuari, a charismatic Muslim leader who set the Philippines’ south ablaze with rebellion decades ago, is back doing what he does best after a less-than-successful fling with peace.

At the age of 71, the former academic is orchestrating a stand-off in the southern port city of Zamboanga which has claimed more than 100 lives and put him back in the national spotlight.

“We don’t want to be part of the Philippines anymore,” Misuari told supporters in his Jolo Island stronghold on Aug. 12 as he declared himself the president of the “Bangsamoro Republik” and railed against national government authorities.

“Their presence in our homeland is illegal, unlawful, illicit. They should pack up and leave,” Misuari said.

A firebrand orator from an influential clan of the Tausug, a warrior-like seafaring tribe, Misuari rallied thousands of fellow Muslims in the early 1970s to take up arms for a separate state in the southern Philippines.

He was continuing a tradition for Muslims in the south of the mostly Catholic Philippines who had for centuries resisted outside Christian rule — whether that be Spanish, American or Filipino.

Misuari was a young political science professor at Manila’s prestigious University of the Philippines when he established the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) to launch a war for independence.

The conflict, which eventually took on other forms with the emergence of other rebel groups, has gone on to claim about 150,000 lives.

Misuari went into Middle East exile after a 1976 truce, then returned a decade later following the fall of former Philippine president Ferdinand Marcos to begin negotiations with democratic governments in Manila.

He eventually agreed to a peace pact in 1996, with the MNLF laying down its arms in return for self-rule in parts of the southern Philippines and Misuari as the autonomous region’s governor.

However, life for Misuari as a bureaucrat and politician would prove to be far less successful than as a revolutionary leader.

As head of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM), he was finally in a position to help alleviate devastating poverty, corruption and violence in the south, and work to end the oppression that the millions of Muslims there feel.

Instead, he established a reputation among the political elite, the national media and some Muslims as an aloof administrator who was more concerned about his own interests.

They argue he wasted the hundreds of millions of dollars in development funds he controlled.

“Some say he blew his chance, that he did not perform well, that he did not deliver, that he failed his people,” said Jesus Dureza, who advised two past Philippine presidents on Muslim issues.

The governor was notorious for spending most of his time away, including weeks at a time with a large retinue at plush Manila hotels or on Middle East tours, said Ramon Casiple, executive director of the Manila-based Institute for Political and Electoral Reform.

Nevertheless, Misuari undoubtedly retains some support and influence.

“Nur is still an icon to some Muslims,” Dureza said.

He and Casiple said Misuari was still able to tap into powerful emotions among many Muslims in the south of feeling oppressed and their dreams of independence.

His status as the founder of the rebellion would also always ensure respect.

However, they said many also realize that Misuari’s motives for instigating the Zamboanga crisis may be driven more by personal interest and a fear of becoming politically irrelevant.